Cents with a D below the date were minted in Denver. Those with an S were made in San Francisco, and those without any letter were made in Philadelphia. Cents are the only coins that don't use the P mint mark.
Denver
Those are the mintmarks where the coins were made. D= Denver. P= Philadelphia.
No. Franklin D Roosevelt prohibited the production of gold coins in 1933. No gold coins have been made for circulation since. They now make commemorative bullion coins so to speak but no gold coins were ever made in 1941.
The letter is known as the mint-mark and tells where the coin was made. A coin having a P mint-mark (or no mint-mark on some coins) was made in Philadelphia, a coin having an S Mint-mark was minted in San Fransisco, a coin with a D mint-mark was minted in Denver.
Cents with a D below the date were minted in Denver. Those with an S were made in San Francisco, and those without any letter were made in Philadelphia. Cents are the only coins that don't use the P mint mark.
This is common, initials, symbols and numbers are often found on coins. The significance is known only to the person that put them on the coin.
A letter is usually a mint mark, indicating where a coin was made. For example, on American coins, P stands for Philadelphia, and D means Denver.
I suppose you're meaning the letter under the date on a coin??? "D" is for Denver, "P" is for Philadelphia. That indicates the mint that stamped the coin. It is also possible to have an "S" for San Francisco, or a "W" for West Point. On older coins you could also have an "O" for New Orleans, a "CC" for Carson City, a "C" for Charlotte, or a "D" for Dahlonega (on early gold coins).
The 5 New Pence and 10 New Pence coins were put into circulation in 1968, three years ahead of the scheduled "D-day" of the 15th of February, 1971.
Denver
Denver
P (or no letter): minted in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania D: minted in Denver, Colorado S: minted in San Fransisco, California
Those are the mintmarks where the coins were made. D= Denver. P= Philadelphia.
D coins come from Denver, Co
It's usually a mint mark, which indicates where the coin was made. For example, on modern U.S. coins, if there is a letter D on it, that means the coin was minted in Denver.
Made in 2007. Along with a letter; A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L. Each letter represents a different month; A = January, L = December. Hope this helps.